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Quebec government faces lawsuits if it backs out of Anticosti Island oil exploration project

Executives think Quebec's premier has changed his position in the past three months on the deal to explore Anticosti Island for oil and gas, putting the project in jeopardy and potentially leaving taxpayers on the hook for breaching the contract.

CALGARY / MONTREAL C If the Quebec government backs from its contract to understand more about for oil and gas on Anticosti Island, its joint-venture partners say they will sue.

Even though the provincial government owns a 35-per-cent interest in the joint venture and has a contractual obligation to assist fund the drilling of three wells this summer on the island in the St. Lawrence River, Quebec Premier Philippe Couillard this week continued to distance himself in the shale project. 

“Clearly our faith in Quebec like a spot to purchase oil and gas, or any other possible development for that matter, is shaken,” Corridor Resources Inc. chief executive Steve Moran said within an email.

Clearly our faith in Quebec like a place to invest in gas and oil, or any other possible development for that matter, is shaken

He confirmed the organization would seek compensation if the government breaks its contract with Corridor and its partners.

Corridor is one of three companies by having an ownership stake, alongside the Quebec government through Resources Quebec, in Anticosti Hydrocarbons LP.

“We have not yet determined the amount of any damages, and that we and our partners have been focusing on moving the project forward,” Moran said.

The Couillard government – which at one point commissioned studies regarding how to get oil and gas off the island of Anticosti – now says it wants absolutely nothing to use the joint venture.

“My name will never be linked to the dilapidation of Anticosti Island,” Couillard said within the province’s National Assembly now, based on the Montreal Gazette. “My name will never be associated with the aggressive savaging of a environment like Anticosti.” 

Jacques Boissinot/The Canadian Press

However, numerous executives with assets in Quebec contacted through the Financial Post said the federal government of Quebec, and the Liberal party in particular, already are closely associated with the work.

On visiting power in 2014, Couillard’s Liberals launched a “Strategic Environmental Assessment” around the entire hydrocarbon sector within the province, and another one specifically on Anticosti.

Montreal-based engineering firm WSP Global Inc. was contracted through the province to do a study Anticosti. Its report, released in October 2015, explored different scenarios to get gas and oil from the island, including the construction of a US$4-billion pipeline stretching 900 kilometres from Anticosti, under the St. Lawrence, up to Quebec City’s south shore.

But it was the Parti Quebecois government of Pauline Marois, right before the 2014 election, that signed a $57-million exploration contract with a consortium look around the island’s energy potential.

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